Quantification of blood glial fibrillary acidic protein using a second-generation microfluidic assay. Validation and comparative analysis with two established assays

Author:

Fazeli Badrieh1,Gómez de San José Nerea1,Jesse Sarah1,Senel Makbule1,Oeckl Patrick12,Erhart Deborah K.1,Ludolph Albert C.12,Otto Markus3,Halbgebauer Steffen12,Tumani Hayrettin12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology , Ulm University Hospital , Ulm , Germany

2. German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE e.V.) , Ulm , Germany

3. Department of Neurology , Halle University Hospital , Halle , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Increased levels of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) in blood have been identified as a valuable biomarker for some neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease and multiple sclerosis. However, most blood GFAP quantifications so far were performed using the same bead-based assay, and to date a routine clinical application is lacking. Methods In this study, we validated a novel second-generation (2nd gen) Ella assay to quantify serum GFAP. Furthermore, we compared its performance with a bead-based single molecule array (Simoa) and a homemade GFAP assay in a clinical cohort of neurological diseases, including 210 patients. Results Validation experiments resulted in an intra-assay variation of 10 %, an inter-assay of 12 %, a limit of detection of 0.9 pg/mL, a lower limit of quantification of 2.8 pg/mL, and less than 20 % variation in serum samples exposed to up to five freeze-thaw cycles, 120 h at 4 °C and room temperature. Measurement of the clinical cohort using all assays revealed the same pattern of GFAP distribution in the different diagnostic groups. Moreover, we observed a strong correlation between the 2nd gen Ella and Simoa (r=0.91 (95 % CI: 0.88–0.93), p<0.0001) and the homemade immunoassay (r=0.77 (95 % CI: 0.70–0.82), p<0.0001). Conclusions Our results demonstrate a high reliability, precision and reproducibility of the 2nd gen Ella assay. Although a higher assay sensitivity for Simoa was observed, the new microfluidic assay might have the potential to be used for GFAP analysis in daily clinical workups due to its robustness and ease of use.

Funder

EU Joint Programme-Neurodegenerative Diseases Networks Genfi-Prox

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

EU Moodmarker Programme

German Research Foundation/DFG

Foundation of the State Baden-Wuerttemberg

Boehringer Ingelheim Ulm University BioCenter

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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